
Nina Wadia’s Gemma Warner, left, and Sam Bailey’s April Devonshire in NOW That’s What I Call A Musical, on tour at Grand Opera House, York, next week. Picture: Pamela Raith
NINA Wadia grew up listening to the NOW tapes. “For me, being part of this musical is like going home,” she says, as NOW That’s What I Call A Musical heads to the Grand Opera House, York, next week.
On tour since last September, comedian-writer Pippa Evans’s fun-filled show, bursting with Whitney Houston, Wham!, Blondie, Tears For Fears, Spandau Ballet hits and many more besides, offers the chance to relive the playlist of your lives in celebration of 40 years of the NOW That’s What I Call Music compilation brand.
“When I read the script, I immediately fell in love with the characters and Pippa’s story,” says Nina who “couldn’t wait to get started on my first ever musical”.
Profiling herself on social media as “Mother, Actress, Producer and Presenter”, Nina has embraced everything, from radio drama company regular to soap opera, in a career that has taken in the BBC Asian sketch comedy in Goodness Gracious; TV roles as Aunty Noor in Citizen Khan, Mrs Hussein in Still Open All Hours and Zainab Masood in EastEnders; being a video game voiceover artist and narrator for the animated series Tweedy And Fluff on Channel 5’s Milkshake and taking her terpsichorean turn as a Strictly Come Dancing contestant in 2021. She is a charity campaigner too, honoured with an OBE.

NOW That’s What I Call A Musical director-choreographer Craig Revel Horwood and writer Pippa Evans
Now she is starring alongside Sam Bailey, 2013 winner of The X Factor, and Eighties’ pop star Sinitta, of So Macho and Toy Boy fame, in Strictly judge Craig Revel Horwood’s touring production of NOW That’s What I Call A Musical.
“I did a workshop for it in October 2023 and thought nothing of it at first because we do a lot of workshops; sometimes things happen; sometimes they don’t, but this one has worked out,” says Nina. “It’s a really fun piece, right up my street, comedy and drama mixed together, but I was a bit confused because music was not my thing.
“But I did sing in the York Theatre Royal panto that winter [playing the kooky Fairy Sugarsnap in Jack And The Beanstalk], and the next thing I knew, they offered me the show, and I thought ‘I’ll take the chance’. It’s been such fun, getting my singing voice up to speed and working with this incredible cast: 21 of us, a huge cast!”
Pippa Evans’s show heads back to 1989 in Birmingham, where school friends Gemma Warner and April Devonshire are busy with planning their lives based on Number One Magazine quizzes and dreaming of snogging Rick Astley.

Nina Wadia with NOW That’s What I Call A Musical co-star Sinitta. Picture: Oliver Rosser
Cut to Birmingham 2009, for the most dreaded event of their adult lives: the school reunion. Drama, old flames and receding hairlines come together as friends reunite and everything from the past starts to slot into place for Nina Wadia’s Gemma and Sam Bailey’s April.
“It’s like a play within a musical and people come away very, very surprised, not expecting what they see,” says Nina. “Then everyone is up on their feet at the end for the medley.”
Nina and Sam are joined by a rotating roster of star turns on the tour run, whether Sinitta, Sonia, T’Pau’s Carol Decker, Jay Osmond or, for one week only in Edinburgh, Toyah Willcox.
“They each do a special fantasy sequence, coming on to do a big number and the megamix at the end,” says Nina. “It’ll be Sinitta doing it in York and she’s so much fun. All our guest stars bring their own style to it, and Sinitta has a real diva style, sending herself up.”

Nina Wadia: Mother, actress, producer, presenter, voiceover artist and charity campaigner
The magic roundabout of guests brings it challenges. “It’s on a wing and a prayer and that’s genuinely half the fun of it, because audiences find it hilarious,” says Nina. “We’ve had maybe two four-hour sessions before they each perform with us.”
She is full of praise for Pippa Evans’s script. “Pippa said she really wanted me to be in the show and wrote the part of Gemma for me, which is a real compliment. She has a wonderful ability to come up with a line where I can make people laugh and also feel empathy and she really understands friendships and how they work,” says Nina.
“My best friends are from when I was 18/19, when you have big dreams, and in this story they’re two friends who’ve not seen each other for 20 years. You see their younger selves with all their dreams and then the second half really flies as you see what’s happened to them.
“It’s funny for 80 per cent of it but you also get invested in it really quickly, going from belly laughing to not being sure what to think, from laughter to crying to dancing at the end.”

Nina Wadia’s Fairy Sugarsnap in Jack And The Beanstalk, York Theatre Royal and Evolution Productions’ pantomime in 2023-2024
Nina is looking forward to her return to York. “I was really quite ill at the start of the panto, which was so upsetting as it was my first time in York, and what’s lovely is that I now get to do what I wanted t do while I was in the panto, which is to train my voice and use it properly,” she says.
“I’m not a musical theatre actor, so the best advice I was given was that if you sing in character, as Gemma, the voice just comes. That advice came from Georgia, our musical director, who said ‘don’t be nervous’and gave me so many different vocal exercises to do. If I felt nervous in September, by October I felt really invested in it and now I love it.”
ROYO, Universal Music UK, Sony Music Entertainment and Mighty Village present NOW That’s What I Call A Musical, Grand Opera House, York, March 18 to 22, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Wednesday and Saturday matinees. Box office: atgtickets.com/york
Copyright of The Press, York.